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1.02 MB

Extraction Summary

7
People
2
Organizations
1
Locations
1
Events
3
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Legal document
File Size: 1.02 MB
Summary

This document is a court transcript from February 15, 2012, in the case of United States v. Paul M. Daugerdas. It details the examination of a juror, Ms. Conrad, regarding her failure to disclose her background, which includes being a suspended lawyer and having a husband with a significant criminal record. The attorneys question whether she intentionally concealed this information to get on the jury and whether she holds any bias towards the defendants or the government, which she denies.

People (7)

Name Role Context
Paul M. Daugerdas Defendant
Named in the case title, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, v PAUL M. DAUGERDAS, ET AL. Also mentioned in questioning regardin...
Conrad Witness / Juror
The individual being questioned (testifying) throughout the document, referred to as Ms. Conrad. The questioning conc...
Schectman Attorney
Referred to as Mr. Schectman. He is questioning the witness, Ms. Conrad, on pages 209 and 210.
Okula Attorney
Referred to as Mr. Okula. He begins his cross-examination of Ms. Conrad on page 211.
McCarthy Attorney
Referred to as Ms. McCarthy. She addresses the court regarding the admission of an exhibit (PMD 23).
Gair Attorney
Referred to as Mr. Gair. Mentioned as having previously offered some evidence.
THE COURT Judge
Presiding over the proceedings, ruling on objections and evidence, and directing the attorneys.

Organizations (2)

Name Type Context
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA government agency
The plaintiff in the case, as seen in the document title.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS company
The court reporting agency that transcribed the proceedings, listed at the bottom of the document.

Timeline (1 events)

2012-02-15
Court testimony of a juror, Ms. Conrad, being questioned about her background and potential biases. The questioning covers her status as a suspended lawyer, her husband's criminal record, and whether she concealed this information to be selected for the jury.
Courtroom
Conrad Mr. Schectman Mr. Okula Ms. McCarthy THE COURT

Locations (1)

Location Context
Mentioned in a question to Ms. Conrad regarding an outstanding warrant.

Relationships (3)

Conrad Juror-Defendant Paul M. Daugerdas
Ms. Conrad is a juror in the case against Paul M. Daugerdas and is being questioned about any potential bias she may have against him.
Mr. Schectman Professional (Attorney-Witness) Conrad
Mr. Schectman conducts a direct examination of Ms. Conrad.
Mr. Okula Professional (Attorney-Witness) Conrad
Mr. Okula conducts a cross-examination of Ms. Conrad.

Key Quotes (3)

"If they knew you were a suspended lawyer with a history of alcoholism with three misdemeanor convictions, with a husband who had seven felony convictions, who had involvement with licensing authorities, who had an outstanding warrant from Arizona, is it your view that these lawyers would have seen you as a different person, a far different person than the one you portrayed yourself to be?"
Source
— Mr. Schectman (A question posed to juror Ms. Conrad summarizing allegations about her concealed background during jury selection.)
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Quote #1
"Well, my husband seems to be a professional defendant, so I probably would have in their mind been a keeper for their side."
Source
— Ms. Conrad (Her response when asked why she thought the defense counsel would be 'wild to have' her on the jury.)
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Quote #2
"Because your view is they wanted people who were crooks because they were crooks."
Source
— Mr. Schectman (A follow-up question to Ms. Conrad, interpreting her previous statement about why the defense would want her on the jury.)
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Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (5,014 characters)

Case 2:92-cr-00444-WHD Document 1644-1 Filed 03/22/12 Page 444 of 767
A-5662
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, v
PAUL M. DAUGERDAS, ET AL.,
C2FFDAU6 Conrad - direct Page 209
1 Q. So those words are not an omission and they're not a lie,
2 they're true?
3 A. Correct.
4 Q. And that is to say that you thought that if these lawyers
5 knew who you actually were, and maybe if that judge knew who
6 you actually were, you wouldn't have been a juror in this case.
7 A. I knew I would be unbiased and fair.
8 Q. No, no. Let's try to answer some questions. You knew if
9 people knew who you actually were, if these lawyers knew who
10 you actually were, perhaps if that judge knew who you actually
11 were, you wouldn't have been a juror in this case? You knew
12 that.
13 A. Probably not, right.
14 Q. Let's not say probably. Let's see if we can get you to be
15 accurate.
16 THE COURT: Just stay back by the podium,
17 Mr. Schectman.
18 Q. Let's try to be accurate.
19 MR. OKULA: Judge, could we stop the speeching, have
20 him ask a question?
21 THE COURT: If you have an objection as to form, you
22 can state it. And Mr. Schectman is going to stay behind the
23 podium.
24 MR. SCHECTMAN: He is indeed.
25 Q. You knew that if these lawyers knew who you really were,
C2FFDAU6 Conrad - direct Page 210
1 there was no chance of your being on this jury?
2 A. I can't read people's minds, sir.
3 Q. Well, you read their minds well enough to keep an enormous
4 amount of information from them, didn't you?
5 A. I can't qualify enormous.
6 Q. Ms. Conrad, I don't want to go through it --
7 A. More likely than not I wouldn't have been picked, yes.
8 Q. Try a higher standard. Beyond a reasonable doubt you
9 wouldn't have been picked.
10 A. I can't put words into your mouth, I'm sorry.
11 Q. If they knew you were a suspended lawyer with a history of
12 alcoholism with three misdemeanor convictions, with a husband
13 who had seven felony convictions, who had involvement with
14 licensing authorities, who had an outstanding warrant from
15 Arizona, is it your view that these lawyers would have seen you
16 as a different person, a far different person than the one you
17 portrayed yourself to be?
18 A. I would think the defense counsel would be wild to have me.
19 Q. Why is that, Ms. Conrad?
20 A. Well, my husband seems to be a professional defendant, so I
21 probably would have in their mind been a keeper for their side.
22 Q. Because your view is they wanted people who were crooks
23 because they were crooks.
24 A. If that's connecting the dots logically.
25 MR. SCHECTMAN: I'll stop there.
C2FFDAU6 Conrad - direct Page 211 February 15, 2012
1 THE COURT: Any inquiry, Ms. McCarthy?
2 MS. McCARTHY: Your Honor, just a housekeeping matter.
3 I'm not sure if this is admitted. PMD 23. Has that been
4 offered in evidence yet? Mr. Gair offered some at the end.
5 I'm not sure.
6 THE COURT: No. You're offering PMD 23?
7 MS. McCARTHY: I am, your Honor.
8 THE COURT: Any objection?
9 MR. OKULA: None, your Honor.
10 THE COURT: All right, PMD 23 is received in evidence.
11 (Exhibit PMD 23 received in evidence)
12 THE COURT: Mr. Okula, you may inquire.
13 MR. OKULA: Thank you, your Honor.
14 CROSS-EXAMINATION
15 BY MR. OKULA:
16 Q. Ms. Conrad, let me pick up where Mr. Schectman left off
17 where he asked you a question and you answered something about
18 connecting the dots about determining whether the defendants
19 were crooks. Do you remember that question?
20 A. Yes.
21 Q. Did you make up your mind about those defendants that you
22 found guilty prior to hearing all of the evidence and prior to
23 hearing the judge's instructions in this case?
24 A. Absolutely not.
25 Q. Ms. Conrad, you didn't attempt to try to get on this jury
C2FFDAU6 Conrad - cross Page 212
1 in order to carry out some personal vendetta or agenda with
2 respect to the defendants, did you?
3 A. No, sir.
4 Q. And you didn't have any vendetta against the government,
5 correct?
6 A. Correct.
7 Q. And similarly, you didn't think that you would cast
8 yourself in a good light with the government if you voted in
9 favor of the government, notwithstanding what the evidence was,
10 is that correct?
11 A. I believe so.
12 Q. So when you failed to tell the truth about your education
13 and failed to reveal your criminal record and your status as a
14 suspended attorney, it was not because you were biased against
15 one party or another, is that correct?
16 A. Correct.
17 Q. Did you have any personal bias or animus against Paul
18 Daugerdas at the beginning of the case?
19 A. No, not at all. I didn't know anybody.
20 Q. So you didn't know any of the defendants, is it fair to say
21 that you had no personal bias or animus or feelings one way or
22 another with respect to them, is that fair?
23 A. That's absolutely correct.
24 Q. And it's true, isn't it, Ms. Conrad, that you hadn't made
25 up your mind once you were selected to be a juror in this case
SOUTHERN DISTRICT REPORTERS (53) Page 209 - Page 212
DOJ-OGR-00009945

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